Mouse Hepatitis Virus Infection Upregulates Genes Involved in Innate Immune Responses

Ho, Wenzhe ; Chatterjee, Dhriti ; Addya, Sankar ; Khan, Reas S. ; Kenyon, Lawrence C. ; Choe, Alexander ; Cohrs, Randall J. ; Shindler, Kenneth S. ; Sarma, Jayasri Das (2014) Mouse Hepatitis Virus Infection Upregulates Genes Involved in Innate Immune Responses PLoS One, 9 (10). e111351. ISSN 1932-6203

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111351

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111351

Abstract

Neurotropic recombinant strain of Mouse Hepatitis Virus, RSA59, induces meningo-encephalitis, myelitis and demyelination following intracranial inoculation. RSA59 induced neuropathology is partially caused by activation of CNS resident microglia, as demonstrated by changes in cellular morphology and increased expression of a microglia/macrophage specific calcium ion binding factor, Iba1. Affymetrix Microarray analysis for mRNA expression data reveals expression of inflammatory mediators that are known to be released by activated microglia. Microglia-specific cell surface molecules, including CD11b, CD74, CD52 and CD68, are significantly upregulated in contrast to CD4, CD8 and CD19. Protein analysis of spinal cord extracts taken from mice 6 days post-inoculation, the time of peak inflammation, reveals robust expression of IFN-γ, IL-12 and mKC. Data suggest that activated microglia and inflammatory mediators contribute to a local CNS microenvironment that regulates viral replication and IFN-γ production during the acute phase of infection, which in turn can cause phagolysosome maturation and phagocytosis of the myelin sheath, leading to demyelination.

Item Type:Article
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ID Code:126168
Deposited On:22 Sep 2022 07:02
Last Modified:19 Oct 2022 10:15

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